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Check your pocket...you've got mail!
Technology originally developed at NASA now lets users send and
receive electronic mail (e-mail) through regular or cellular
telephones using a small, hand-held unit.
PocketScienceTM Inc., of Santa Clara, California,
is a privately held company founded in 1995, aimed at making
mobile e-mail service not only affordable, but easy to use. The
company is pursuing its mission by melding key technologies,
expertise in consumer electronics and electronic messaging, and
strategic partnerships. At its inception, PocketScienceTM
was a member of the NASA Ames Technology Commercialization Center.
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PocketMail®
by PocketScience is a hand-held e-mail device that uses technology
originally developed at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. |
A new hand-held device uses technology originally developed
at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Through its involvement
with Ames' Technology Commercialization Center, PocketScienceTM
was able to use space probe communications technology and adapt
it for advanced signal processing on Earth.
The idea behind the technology is to overcome the limitations
of current mobile messaging solutions and provide access to e-mail
anywhere. PocketScienceTM created its first offering,
the PocketMail® device. PocketMail®
makes it possible to send and receive e-mail from anywhere in
the world without turning on a computer. The device gives regular
e-mail users a practical alternative to laptop computers and
wireless devices when trying to send e-mail on the go. International
travelers no longer have to be confronted with the nightmare
of incompatible electric systems and telephone jacks while far
from their home country. The mobile messaging device also permits
the transmission of faxes.
The firm's device operates by holding it against a phone handset
and pushing a button. Even under the harshest conditions, the
small, 9-ounce portable unit, can send and receive e-mail through
most phones worldwide, including cellular, cordless, Integrated
Services Digital Network (ISDN), office and hotel PBX phones,
and pay phones. In airport terminals, on busy street corners,
and in other noisy locales, the device functions by incorporating
special modulation schemes, error-correction, data compression,
and data communications protocols. The technology is packaged
to fit in a shirt pocket, runs on two AA batteries, and is about
the size of a calculator. A modest monthly charge, beyond the
initial cost of the electronic device, gives users access to
e-mail services.
Users of the device compose their message, dial a nationwide
toll-free access number, then push one button while holding the
device against the telephone handset to send and receive messages.
No cables or special connectors are needed. By employing burst
packet communications, no lengthy log-on is needed. The entire
process usually can be completed in less than a minute.
Electronic mail has been on a spectacular growth curve. Its
phenomenal climb as a major communication tool is supported by
research surveys. One study suggests the number of e-mail users
in the United States alone is expected to grow from 75 million
in 1998 to 135 million in 2001. And those users will transmit,
in the U.S., as many as 500 billion messages in 2001.
Another survey statistic is that Internet users check their e-mail
at least once a day, a habit that is on the rise from previous
years.
"With e-mail rapidly becoming a preferred way to stay
in touch with friends, family, superiors, staff, or clients,
it's only natural that people will also want to be able to access
and respond to their e-mail while away from their homes and offices,"
states a corporate background paper developed by PocketScienceTM.
The first PocketMail®-enabled products have
been announced by JVC and Sharp Electronics. Several other U.S.
and international consumer electronics manufacturers are currently
evaluating PocketMail® technology for inclusion
in their next generation of products.
PocketScience TMis a trademark
of PocketScience, Inc. PocketMail®
is a registered trademark of PocketScience, Inc.
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